Emily Haberlack
Sociology PhD Student
Emily Haberlack (she/her) is a first-year Sociology PhD student in the Department of Sociology & Anthropology at Northeastern University and a researcher at the Social Science Environmental Health Research Institute in The PFAS Lab. She earned an MA in sociology from Colorado State University (CSU), where her research focused on the interactions between military, state, and community responses to military-created PFAS water contamination. While at CSU, Emily received a fellowship position and a grant from the Colorado Water Center (CWC) in partnership with the U.S. Geological Survey. Her ongoing research with the CWC investigates the role of equity programming in water districts across Colorado. Broadly, Emily is interested in the intersections of environmental justice, resource, and medical sociology. While completing her BS in environmental science, environmental studies, and sociology at Iowa State University, Emily developed a systemic literature review on empathic skills development in environment, health, science, and risk communication. Her previous research on disaster management, spatial thinking, and game design is published in the International Journal of Geo-Information. Emily’s undergraduate work was funded through National Science Fountain and Iowa State University grants.
Areas of Research: hydrology, environmental justice, Indigenous environmental justice, green criminology, disaster management, contested illness, social movements, and knowledge production.
Faculty Advisor: Phil Brown